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Author Topic: Robertson: U.S. should 'take out' Venezuela's Chavez  (Read 13442 times)
Ayinde
Ayinde
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« on: August 24, 2005, 07:45:34 PM »

August 23, 2005

(CNN) -- Conservative Christian broadcaster Pat Robertson has called for the United States to assassinate Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez, calling him "a terrific danger" bent on exporting Communism and Islamic extremism across the Americas.

"If he thinks we're trying to assassinate him, I think that we really ought to go ahead and do it," Robertson told viewers on his "The 700 Club" show Monday. "It's a whole lot cheaper than starting a war."

Robertson, a contender for the Republican presidential nomination in 1988, called Chavez "a dangerous enemy to our south, controlling a huge pool of oil, that could hurt us badly."

"We have the ability to take him out, and I think the time has come that we exercise that ability," Robertson said. "We don't need another $200 billion war to get rid of one strong-arm dictator. It's a whole lot easier to have some of the covert operatives do the job and then get it over with."
Full Article : cnn.com
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Ayinde
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« Reply #1 on: August 24, 2005, 07:47:01 PM »

Regime Change By Assassin? Easier Said Than Done.

"And quickly, various Bush administration officials performed the ritual political distancing from a figure who, this incident notwithstanding, represents the president's Christian conservative flank.
 
No administration ever wants to be poised anywhere near a public discussion of assassination. The broad U.S. history of assassinations against foreign leaders is long, colorful and still controversial.
 
What we know comes, in the main, from investigations by a mid-1970s Senate select committee into a very busy era of hits or attempted hits that were either plotted by the United States or aided and supported by it. Five cases -- in Congo, the Dominican Republic, South Vietnam, Cuba and Chile -- were examined by that Senate committee, commonly known as the Church committee after its chairman, Idaho Democrat Frank Church.
 
The bitter fallout from some of those cases continues to shape national politics in those countries today.
 
Congo, for instance, has seen 45 years of dictatorship, war and misrule that may come to an end next year if elections go off there as planned -- quite a big if. It would be the first national election since Lumumba was voted in as prime minister in 1960, when the colony called Belgian Congo gained its independence.
 
Lumumba wouldn't last. The United States, the Belgians and various Congolese factions were after him in what became a race to a kill.
 
The CIA dispatched an agent with that infamous vial of poison, the Church committee reported. At around the same time, a Congolese military leader named Mobutu Sese Seko and others were hatching a plan to kidnap Lumumba and kill him, which they did. He was beaten to death. The CIA man with the poison dumped it into the Congo River.
 
In Chile, too, an old assassination still reverberates as that nation grapples with the legacy of Gen. Augusto Pinochet.
 
The CIA supported a plot to destabilize President Salvador Allende's government by kidnapping one of his generals. It was believed that Gen. Rene Schneider's removal would open the way for an anti-Allende coup. The CIA supplied weapons to a group of dissidents who would neutralize Schneider, though the Church committee said it was not with CIA weapons that Schneider was ultimately killed in 1970. Pinochet led a coup against Allende three years later -- a move the United States also encouraged, the Church committee said.
 
On Nov. 2, 1963, just three weeks before President John F. Kennedy was assassinated, South Vietnamese President Ngo Dinh Diem died in a coup. The U.S. supported the generals who plotted against him, on the theory that the Vietnam War was more winnable without Diem than with him. The rest, of course, is history.
 
When all these machinations came to light in the 1970s, President Gerald Ford issued an executive order prohibiting political assassination.
 
But in 1986, the United States bombed Libyan targets where Moammar Gaddafi, the country's ruler, was believed present. This came after a terror attack on a Berlin nightclub frequented by U.S. soldiers.
 
In the 1990s, President Bill Clinton authorized the CIA to find and kill Osama Bin Laden.
 
And the Iraq war began, you might recall, with a U.S. airstrike on a bunker where Saddam Hussein and his sons were believed to be hiding. It might have been a hit, though it was also the start of a war."
 
© 2005 The Washington Post Company

Full Article : washingtonpost.com
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Tracey
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« Reply #2 on: August 24, 2005, 08:49:53 PM »



Robertson’s Fatwah: “A Whole Lotta Smitin’ Goin’ On”

by Mike Whitney
www.dissidentvoice.org
August 24, 2005


Excerpt:

It is Robertson’s less celebrated remarks that are really worth considering. He said that Chavez had “destroyed the Venezuelan economy” and was turning Venezuela into a “launching pad for communist infiltration and Muslim extremism.”

The claim of “Muslim extremism” is too far fetched to even consider, but the “communism” charge gets to the heart of the matter and the real reason why Chavez is so reviled by the oligarchs in the Bush administration. Chavez has initiated mild reforms that has redistributed some of Venezuela’s prodigious oil wealth and created free health care, free education, jobs-training programs, and welfare assistance -- all the policies that are anathema to the elite cadres of capitalists in the Bush administration. Robertson shares their contempt for these “redistributive” programs and merely echoed that hatred in his statement. That’s why it’s unlikely that his punishment will be too harsh.

If Robertson is to be accused of a crime it should be about something of substance not his foolish blathering about Chavez. His real failing as a religious leader is that he has never defended the rights or liberties of the downtrodden he pretends to represent. He has never spoken out against the horrific abuses at either Abu Ghraib or Guantanamo, nor has he wavered in his support for a war that has killed over 100,000 Iraqis. Instead, he has used his position to fatten the coffers at the 700 Club and to conceal his unbridled disdain for gays, women and Muslims.

There is a Biblical precedent for men like Robertson, but it has nothing to do with “The Golden Rule.” It’s all about duplicity, like Matthew says in the Gospel:

“Woe to you, scribes and Pharisees, hypocrites! for you tithe mint and cumin, and have neglected the weightier matters of the Law, justice and mercy and faith; these you ought to have done, without neglecting the others. You blind guides, straining out a gnat and swallowing a camel.” (Matthew 23:23-24)

Self righteousness is not righteousness. Robertson should pay a little more attention to the Book he says he believes in.

Full Article: http://dissidentvoice.org/Aug05/Whitney0824-2.htm
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Ayinde
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« Reply #3 on: August 24, 2005, 08:52:07 PM »

Televangelist modifies Chavez remark

Conservative US televangelist Pat Robertson, who called for the assassination of Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez on Monday, says he was misinterpreted and that the leftist leader could be removed through kidnapping.

"I said our special forces could take him out. Take him out could be a number of things including kidnapping," Robertson said on Wednesday of Venezuela's leader on his The 700 Club television programme.

"There are a number of ways of taking out a dictator from power besides killing him. I was misinterpreted," added Robertson.

Robertson, the founder of the Christian Coalition and a leader of the Christian right that has provided strong support for President George W Bush, said on Monday of Chavez's fears of US assassination: "If he thinks we are trying to assassinate him, I think that we really ought to go ahead and do it.

"We have the ability to take him out, and I think the time has come that we exercise that ability."

Full Article...
http://english.aljazeera.net/NR/exeres/FF63AC34-05A7-4DB9-AAB4-28B6192EBC69.htm
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Ayinde
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« Reply #4 on: August 27, 2005, 03:59:11 PM »

Relating to Venezuela

Hurricane Hugo (Chavez)


By TOM BARRY

As President Hugo Chavez adeptly leverages Venezuela's oil wealth to forge an array of regional alliances that leave the United States out in the cold, U.S. ­ Venezuela tensions are heating up. Boosted by the rising prices of oil and the deepening regional anger over U.S. imperial arrogance, Chavez has proved able not only to construct a counter-hegemonic constituency in Venezuela among the country's poor majority but also to piece together a regional network that is challenging U.S. political and economic dominance. Uncle Sam is becoming the odd man out in the hemisphere claimed as U.S. domain since the early 19 th century.

What is to be done? As Chavez's star has risen and as the U.S. stars and stripes increasingly become subject to derision, the Bush administration finds itself at a loss when attempting to stem the anti-imperial tide. All its attempts to persuade or dissuade, enforce, or manipulate have backfired.

Meanwhile, President Chavez-the democratically elected president whom TV evangelist Pat Robertson said the U.S. "covert operatives" should "take out"-has mounted an impressive public diplomacy campaign backed by petrodollars that underwrite ambitious social and economic development projects. Chavez is stirring hopes among Latin Americans and Caribbean people that they can break free from the yoke of U.S. power.


Pat Robertson's observations that assassinating Chavez would be a cheaper foreign policy option than launching another $200 billion war and that such an action could be done without disrupting Venezuelan oil exports were not the ravings of a know-nothing fundamentalist preacher. Rather, they were the opinions of a politically powerful televangelist who over the past three decades has helped forge the Republican Party's strongest electoral constituency. Prior to the 2004 presidential election, Robertson heartily endorsed Bush, saying: "I believe the blessing of heaven is upon him."

What's more, Robertson's political convictions-including his crucial leadership in supporting the Reagan administration's vengeful rollback policies in Central America, his fire-and-brimstone raging against the softliners of the State Department, and his essential role in aligning the Religious Right with hardline Zionists-have proved well within the mainstream politics of the ascendant right of the Republican Party.

The State Department quickly dismissed Robertson's advice as "inappropriate."

Clearly, Robertson's remarks were "inappropriate." But treating this as another media event, with accusations, disavowals, and recriminations, misses the opportunity that Robertson has afforded.

What is an appropriate response to the new Bolivarian spirit of Hugo Chavez that the Bush administration and regional elites find so disconcerting?

If the United States hopes to maintain productive diplomatic and economic relations with Latin America and the Caribbean, it would do well to consider what should be done differently.

The U.S. government-and the U.S. public-would do well to use the Robertson brouhaha to draw up a list of what are inappropriate policies and remarks, while at the same time outlining more appropriate measures.


Appropriate Responses to Chavez

Get in the Bolivarian spirit by encouraging intraregional alliances that unify the Latin American and Caribbean nations and breakdown longstanding economic, border, and cultural tensions. It is in the best interests of the United States to have a Latin American region that seeks collectively to address its common problems. Chavez may be grandstanding, but he is on the money with much of his political rhetoric. What's more, he is putting money where his mouth is. Independence, self-reliance, and neighborhood problem-solving are core U.S. attributes. Rather than seeing these as a threat in Latin America, we should applaud and encourage these efforts.

Chavez is right to evoke the politics of independence and unity heralded by Simon Bolivar. For centuries, the region has been mired in dependency and self-defeating nationalism. Whether his Bolivarian rhetoric is opportunistic or populist in the worst sense is not the issue. What Washington needs to understand is that this rhetoric resonates throughout the region because the time is right for a new approach-just as it was right in the early 1800s when Bolivar dreamed, fought, and agonized in his quest to bring political independence and unity to South America.

Bolivar is not part of the U.S. legacy of Latin American relations. Yet with Franklin D. Roosevelt we have our own legendary figure whose policies can point the way toward more constructive U.S.-Latin American relations.

Long past its own eras of fighting for independence and unity, the United States in the late 1930s and 1940s sought to reconcile its status as a regional hegemon with the best of its values. With his good neighbor policy, FDR broke with the politics of imperialism and offered a new framework for hemispheric politics-emphasizing self-determination, mutually beneficial trade, annual political forums, and cooperation.

At the time, the Good Neighbor Policy was a radical breakthrough that succeeded in washing away much of the distrust and condescension that had previously prevailed in North-South relations. A revival of the Rooseveltian, good neighbor spirit would be just as salutary today.

A good neighbor ethic means that the U.S. government wouldn't interfere in the internal politics of its hemispheric neighbors, as much as it disagreed with their politics and behavior-as long as there were no direct threats to our country. Contrary to what Robertson and other administration-associated ideologues would have us believe, the Chavez government is not exporting Muslim terrorism, communism, or any other politics that threaten life in the United States.

With regard to the new trends in Latin America, self-determination should be the operative value that guides U.S. foreign policy rather than an insistence on a U.S.-determined course of political economics. Diplomacy rather than political assassination, kidnapping, coups, or political aid to Chavez opponents is the only appropriate U.S. foreign policy.

Just as Chavez backs his explosive rhetoric with his ambitious social projects, the United States would do well for Latin America-and for itself-if it took some positive steps to demonstrate its commitment to development and democracy. The type of social projects and economic integration spearheaded by the Venezuelan government deserve the backing of the U.S. government and people.

As is, it appears that Washington stands against literacy, healthcare, and agrarian reform programs. As is, it appears that Washington stands against the type of integration in which one economically privileged nation-in this case Venezuela with its wealth of oil-shares with its neighbors on favorable terms.

Yes, such efforts redound to the credit of Chavez, and to his associate Fidel Castro; and yes, it is about politics and personalities as much or more than about altruism. But they would also redound to the credit of the United States if we backed such appealing initiatives rather than dismissing them or vainly seeking to discredit them.


Inappropriate Responses to Chavez

Somehow, U.S. officials who have traveled this year to Latin America to try to shore up deteriorating relations, such as Condoleezza Rice, Donald Rumsfeld, and Southcom Bantz Craddock, don't get it. It is not a language problem, but an ideological one.

U.S. actions speak even louder about U.S. intent than does its flatulent rhetoric. Obviously inappropriate actions include support for coups against foreign leaders, support for death squads and assassinations, continuing cover-up of past U.S. involvement in such operations, backing militarization over diplomacy and negotiations, and seeking to manipulate or otherwise influence elections.

If Washington wants to establish itself as a respected hemispheric leader, and to counter or balance the rapidly increasing influence of Chavez, it should begin acknowledging as counterproductive and definitively inappropriate a wide range of other policies.

The U.S. conception of economic integration is blatantly U.S.-centric. Critics both inside and outside the United States have repeatedly noted that Washington's idea of free trade is one-sided: when U.S. producers or investors are adversely affected, then protectionism rather than free trade rules. But this criticism bears repetition, especially since the Bush administration continues down the same path with the various regional and bilateral free trade accords it is currently pushing.

The reason that the United States has any success at all with such a trade strategy is that it is a superpower with a mighty market. A "just say 'no'" response by Latin American and Caribbean nations is not plausible given current hemispheric asymmetries and in the absence of countervailing regional trade accords.

The size and proximity of the U.S. market-the largest in the world-are not the only draws. Particularly in the Caribbean, Central America, and the Andes, national economies have become dependent on the U.S. market because of trade preferences proffered by Washington-in part related to counterinsurgency and drug war strategies, and in part related to a globalization strategy to create a U.S.-controlled regional trade bloc.

The free trade deals offered these countries are not free at all. If Andean countries decide to reject U.S. free trade packages, then the United States will allow the trade preferences that benefit Latin American export sectors to expire. It is inappropriate and hypocritical for the United States to preach free trade but then threaten to resurrect trade barriers if these small trading partners do not sign on the dotted line of U.S.-constructed free trade "agreements."

In contrast, Venezuela is offering the region highly preferential deals for oil while the Bush administration hypocritically insists that small countries like Bolivia and Ecuador play on a "level playing field" with the United States.

Other policies that deserve to be condemned as inappropriate are those that cut off aid if a country refuses to guarantee impunity for U.S. troops and drug control agents, retaliate when Latin American neighbors refuse to echo the U.S. position at the United Nations, or use debt relief as a bargaining chip to force poor nations to adopt neoliberal policy reforms.

Such policies don't incite the media attention that Robertson garnered for his broadcasting network and his radical views. But they are more contemptible because they define the reality of what is considered an appropriate U.S. foreign policy toward the region.

Tom Barry is policy director of the International Relations Center (IRC), online at www.irc-online.org, and an associate of the IRC Americas Program.

http://www.counterpunch.org/barry08272005.html
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